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The Obama administration's worldview is still emerging, but its policies toward Russia and China are already revealing.
I have found that the Uncertainty Principle of quantum physics actually has no analogue in foreign policy. Regardless, it is a good way to describe Obama's foreign policy doctrine.
As China grows less predictable and the United States less willing to shoulder its responsibilities, familiar patterns of bilateral relations must change.
As Japan's recent deflationary experience would suggest, one needs to be forward- and not backward-looking in gauging the problem of deflation.
Grave challenges face each of America’s armed services: the Navy’s size is shrinking while its operational demands increase; the Army and the Marine Corps are on the chopping block for further troop reductions; and the Air Force is aging rapidly. (INCLUDES VIDEO)
Just days after U.S. forces withdrew from Iraq, a series of attacks in Baghdad have raised doubts about the security of the country, while political upheaval threatens to undermine its government. AEI’s vice president for foreign and defense policy studies, Danielle Pletka, shared some questions with U.S. Senator John McCain.
John Pomfret's front page article in the Washington Post on the Obama administration's arm twisting of the Dalai Lama is further reason to doubt that the president's "strategic reassurance" policy is anything but a policy of appeasing the PRC.
Hillary Clinton's proclamation that a peaceful resolution to the South China Sea territorial dispute is in America's core interest is a welcome departure from President Obama's disastrous "strategic reassurance" policy in Asia.






